Little heron
The little heron is a small heron, about 44 cm tall. It is mostly sedentary and frequents both fresh and salt water habitats. It is found in the Old World tropics from west Africa to Japan and Australia. The little heron was formerly considered to be conspecific with the striated heron.
Taxonomy
The little heron was formally described in 1804 by the Swedish naturalist Adam Afzelius based on a specimen collected in Sierra Leone, West Africa. He placed the new species with the herons in the genus Ardea and coined the binomial name Ardea atricapilla. The specific epithet is Latin meaning "black-haired". The little heron is now one of four species placed in the genus Butorides that was introduced in 1852 by the English zoologist Edward Blyth.The little heron was formerly considered to be conspecific with the striated heron. A molecular phylogenetic study of the genus Butorides, submitted in 2023 as a master's thesis, found that the striated heron was paraphyletic. To resolve the paraphyly, twenty subspecies of the striated heron were moved to a new species, the little heron, making the striated heron a monotypic species restricted to South America.
Twenty subspecies are recognised:
- B. a. atricapilla – Africa south of the Sahara
- B. a. brevipes – Somalia and the Red Sea coasts
- B. a. crawfordi Nicoll, 1906 – Aldabra and Amirante groups
- B. a. rhizophorae Salomonsen, 1934 – Comoros
- B. a. rutenbergi – Madagascar and Réunion
- B. a. degens Hartert, EJO, 1920 – northeast Seychelles
- B. a. albolimbata Reichenow, 1900 – Chagos Archipelago and Maldives
- B. a. amurensis – southeast Siberia, northeast China and Japan
- B. a. actophila Oberholser, 1912 – east China to north Myanmar and north Vietnam
- B. a. javanica – Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka to Thailand, Philippines, the Greater Sunda Islands and Sulawesi
- B. a. spodiogaster Sharpe, 1894 – Andaman and Nicobar Islands and islands off west Sumatra
- B. a. steini Mayr, 1943 – Lesser Sunda Islands
- B. a. moluccarum Hartert, EJO, 1920 – Moluccas
- B. a. papuensis Mayr, 1940 – northwest New Guinea
- B. a. idenburgi Rand, 1941 – north New Guinea
- B. a. flyensis Salomonsen, 1966 – central south, southeast New Guinea
- B. a. stagnatilis – coastal northwest, central north Australia
- B. a. macrorhyncha – east, northeast Australia and New Caledonia
- B. a. solomonensis Mayr, 1940 – New Hanover Island to Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu to Fiji
- B. a. patruelis – Tahiti
Description